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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...school-attack-caught-camera-says-bullied.html

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A transgender girl accused of assaulting two students at a Texas high school alleges that she was being bullied and was merely fighting back

Shocking video shows a student identified by police as Travez Perry violently punching, kicking and stomping on a girl in the hallway of Tomball High School.

The female student was transported to the hospital along with a male student, whom Perry allegedly kicked in the face and knocked unconscious.

According to the police report, Perry - who goes by 'Millie' - told officers that the victim has been bullying her and had posted a photo of her on social media with a negative comment.

One Tomball High School parent whose daughter knows Perry said that the 18-year-old had been the target of a death threat.

'From what my daughter has said that the girl that was the bully had posted a picture of Millie saying people like this should die,' the mother, who asked not to be identified by name, told DailyMail.com.

When Perry appeared in court on assault charges, her attorney told a judge that the teen has been undergoing a difficult transition from male to female and that: 'There's more to this story than meets the eye.'

Perry is currently out on bond, according to authorities.

The video of the altercation sparked a widespread debate on social media as some claim Perry was justified in standing up to her alleged bullies and others condemn her use of violence.

The mother who spoke with DailyMail.com has been one of Millie's most ardent defenders on Facebook.

'I do not condone violence at all. But situations like this show that people now a days, not just kids, think they can post what they want. Or say what they want without thinking of who they are hurting,' she said.

'Nobody knows what Millie has gone through, and this could have just been a final straw for her. That is all speculation of course because I don't personally know her or her family, but as a parent and someone who is part of the LGBTQ community this girl needs help and support, not grown men online talking about her private parts and shaming and mocking her.'

One Facebook commenter summed up the views of many, writing: 'This was brutal, and severe! I was bullied for years and never attacked anyone!'

Multiple commenters rejected the gender transition defense and classified the attack as a male senselessly beating a female.

One woman wrote on Facebook: 'This person will get off because they're transitioning. This is an animal. She kicked, and stomped, and beat...not okay. Bullying is not acceptable, but kicking someone in the head. Punishment doesn't fit the crime.'


FB https://www.facebook.com/travez.perry http://archive.is/mnEmm

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They don't actually give a fuck if you identify as NB or whatever because it doesn't affect your healthcare
Dunno about that,

I'm pretty sure knowing if a patient is going to need to be pumped full of sedatives does affect healthcare. And they need to have some muscle ready in case said patient resists the nurses' attempts.
 
Some insanity from Fallon Fox.
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Edit: It was replying to a tweet where Rowling was praising a 7 year old's drawing (archive)

I read somewhere that most of the women that she fought had no idea she was trans before the fight (until the media hoopla started), so I think this is made up bullshit
 
I read somewhere that most of the women that she fought had no idea she was trans before the fight (until the media hoopla started), so I think this is made up bullshit

He beat:

Rickie Gomes (June 2011)
Elisha Helsper (May 2012)
Ericka Newsome (March 2013)
before it came out that he was a man

By the time he smashed up Tamikka Brents it was 18 months since everyone knew he was a man.

The people he beat were all total no-hopers, so he's not even good at beating up women.
 
Didn't Fallon commit some DV before they went trans and hopped in the MMA ring so they could beat up women?

I don't know if it was before he trooned out but I do know it happened in the state of Illinois in...I think maybe dupage, kane or cook counties.
There used to be a blog talking about it but I can't seem to find it now.
 
They realize that they're just alienating sane people like Lynne, right?
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Me saying all Golden Retrievers are dogs = me saying Golden Retrievers are the only dogs. Got it.

And since I've just made that error in logic, it is quite clear that we can state without further argument that cats, guinea pigs and budgeriars are also dogs. Got it, again. Boy, who knew informal logic could be so illuminating?

Take that, haterz. You've just been shut down with #currentyear logic.
 
Some insanity from Fallon Fox.
View attachment 1382721
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Edit: It was replying to a tweet where Rowling was praising a 7 year old's drawing (archive)
Think global, act local - you too can help Diversity by shattering your wife's orbital bone, possibly giving her permanent vision loss and/or brain trauma. Do it for all women, whether they have penises or not.
 
holy shit these brainless fucking retards
"dogs don't have horns" doesn't mean "anything with no horns is a dog" ffs
They also keep arguing that gay men should have no problem dating trans men. That there's nothing wrong if anyone can sleep with anyone.

These people stupidly think that in today's society, having no standards at all is consequence free. That preferences are archaic and constricting.

That's all fine and dandy in magical rainbow land, but reality kind of has a funny way of reasserting itself. Painfully and agonizingly.

In the case of pedophiles following through with that "anyone can sleep with anyone" rhetoric, I can only dream; dream, that parents go full KKK and burn that degenerate on a cross.
 
one of our favorite almost-lolcows, charlotte clymer, in USA TODAY (June 17)
"this column was adapted from a twitter thread"

What JK Rowling should know about a transgender woman like me: Every day in public is risky
Trans people constantly adjust to the feelings of cisgender people. There aren't enough hours to fight every battle, enough rights to guarantee safety.
Charlotte Clymer
Opinion contributor

The Supreme Court ruling this week that LGBTQ people are protected from employment discrimination under civil rights laws was welcome news, particularly since this is the first time transgender rights have been explicitly codified by the high court.

But there is so much work left to be done that the ruling did not fix. The rights and dignity of transgender people are constantly under attack, not only legally but physically, as we see with continuing violence against trans people, and culturally, as evidenced by the controversy J.K. Rowling stirred up last week.

Her transphobic remarks attempted to deny the overwhelming medical and scientific consensus affirming trans people and peddled dangerous and hurtful myths about our community. In a rebuttal to the backlash that was riddled with inaccuracies and dangerous propaganda about the trans community, she claimed to know trans people.

It's really hard to believe that. I'll tell you why: Folks who have trans people in their lives — and actually care about them — know how much trans people generally go out of their way to accommodate cisgender people. Let me explain.

It's risky to be in the public square

Like any community, trans people are definitely not a monolith and our experiences vary widely, but there are fairly common actions we take just to be in the public square and avoid risking violence and discrimination from cisgender people. Here are some examples:

►I haven't been to the gym since I came out. Most cisgender women would be completely fine with a trans woman using the showers after a workout, but do I want to risk ticking off some random transphobe? No. Do I want to risk having someone take photos of me without my consent? No.

►If I'm out in another city, either for business or pleasure, I watch how much I eat and drink. I don't want to be in a position where I'll need to use a public restroom and feel uncertain whether it's safe.


►When I travel out of state, I look up nondiscrimination protections for where I'm going, including airport layovers. Just to know what's available to me. God forbid I have a layover in a state unfriendly to trans people and get assaulted or arrested for using the restroom.

►If I'm in Washington, D.C., and there's a long line to use a public restroom, I usually walk away if I can help it — which is often. I don't know who's a tourist from a conservative part of the country. I don't want to cause a scene or have someone take a photo of me standing in line.
Charlotte Clymer


►I have a membership to a women-only workspace. It's quite trans-inclusive and make a point of being affirming. I'm still not going to use its shower facility. Too risky. Some random transphobe makes a fuss, and it becomes a whole thing. Not worth it.

►I live in a city that has comprehensive nondiscrimination protections for trans people. If I face discrimination, I know that the Washington government will have my back, but the unspoken part of that is all the labor and mental anguish to go through the process. It's heartbreaking.

Even in places where we have legal protections, I worry about being a burden. I don't want to cause headaches. I have faced discrimination in places where it was illegal and let it go because I wasn't sure whether it was worth it. And I feel terrible about that. I feel guilty.

Transgender and nonbinary people are constantly adjusting and revolving our lives around the preferences and feelings of cisgender people, not because we want to do that but because there aren't enough hours in the day to fight every battle and not enough rights to guarantee our safety.

And I have a considerable amount of privilege. I'm white, able bodied, doing OK financially and not a religious minority. And here I am, still worried about my safety in cisgender spaces, which are basically everywhere outside of queer establishments.

Imagine what it's like for Black and brown transgender and nonbinary folks. Or trans people with physical disabilities. Or trans people who are religious minorities. Or trans people without a steady income. Or trans people who are sex workers. Or homeless. Or with severe health issues.

I am incredibly sorry that J.K. Rowling experienced sexual abuse. I really am. Last year, I was sexually assaulted by a cisgender, heterosexual man in a public space. He groped me, and I was so shocked that I didn't know what to do. Because who's going to believe me? I didn't report him.

Working to exist outside the front door

According to the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey, nearly half of trans people will experience sexual assault in our lifetimes. Almost 60% of trans people have experienced mistreatment by police. About the same percent say they don't feel comfortable calling the police for help.

There is not a week that has gone by since I came out that I wasn't street harassed in some way. It's just something I don't even talk about anymore. I expect it and move on with my day. Put my headphones in and walk, so I can avoid hearing it.

There are videos of men beating the s--t out of trans women that go viral. Our murders are somehow considered insignificant. Our bodies are constantly sexualized. We are walking mirrors for the deepest insecurities of cisgender people.

So when J.K. Rowling says she knows and loves trans people, I don't buy it. I don't think she really knows any trans people, not even on the basis of casual friendship, let alone the kind of meaningful connection to get a glimpse into our daily lives.

Because if she did know trans people on the kind of level that would grant understanding, she would understand that we spend so much of our lives trying to avoid compromising our safety and dignity simply for the act of existing outside our front doors.

Monday’s court ruling won’t stop people like J.K. Rowling from claiming to know us from such a clear position of ignorance about our daily lives. But maybe in time, and with more court rulings and legislation that affirm our rights and dignity, that will change.

Charlotte Clymer, a former Human Rights Campaign press secretary, is a writer, LGBTQ advocate and military veteran. Follow her on Twitter: @cmclymer. This column was adapted from a Twitter thread.

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1- charlotte has stated elsewhere that 'she' passes, so why would anyone be upset with her in the ladies room?

they say that shit ALL the time & its a direct contradiction.

2-notice he compares being "groped" & anon street harassment to actually living with an abuser full-time, the kind who still thinks he did the right thing & is proud to tell the world. jfc.
they routinely offer this kind of thing as equivalent to actual domestic abuse, which is incredible.
charlotte is a trained military veteran the size of a linebacker & could easily defend himself against domestic abuse, so he deflects to something sexualized like "being groped" & random catcalls to prove he's a girl.
 
I have a membership to a women-only workspace. It's quite trans-inclusive and make a point of being affirming. I'm still not going to use its shower facility. Too risky. Some random transphobe makes a fuss, and it becomes a whole thing. Not worth it.

Clymer has a thread here and is nothing but an aggressive fetishsist.
He was a creepy pervert before he adopted the name charlotte, he has a huge internet footprint .

This is who they pick to be the voice of a supposed at risk group speaks volumes and not in the way they want it to.

His photo is photoshopped within an inch of its life.
 
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Charlotte Clymer said:
people are constantly adjusting and revolving our lives around the preferences and feelings of cisgender people, not because we want to do that but because there aren't enough hours in the day to fight every battle
Wow. Sounds like an ordinary human life to me. How terrifying that somebody would have to go through that.
 
Clymer has a thread here and is nothing but an aggressive fetishsist.
He was a creepy pervert before he adopted the name charlotte, he has a huge internet footprint .

This is who they pick to be the voice of a supposed at risk group speaks volumes and not in the way they want it to.

His photo is photoshopped within an inch of its life.
He has a thread here. He was mobbed out of the SJW sphere a few years ago for being a creepy male feminist (the accusations were not that well founded at the time imo, but they're much more well-founded now with the low-effort trooning out), then he came back as a Brave and Stunning transwoman and got a cushy job with the HRC.
 
I read somewhere that most of the women that she fought had no idea she was trans before the fight (until the media hoopla started), so I think this is made up bullshit
They knew Fallon Fox was a male, but they were not told he would be in the mma tournament until they showed up, because the promoters knew that if the women know this POS was going to be there, the women wouldn't have signed up for the event. But if they showed up and saw he was on the schedule, to withdraw at that point would mean they wasted their training and the money they spent on the training. Ashlee Evans-Smith talked about it in an interview. So as always the troons get what they want by deception.
 
Just when you thought trannies couldn't ruin anything else, they start running for office and getting elected
Having a look at openly trans elected officials, it seems they overwhelmingly male (trans women).
How unexpected, while still being stunning and brave

Pink News tweeted:

JK Rowling suggests she 'might have transitioned' if given the option when younger, wrongly linking gender identity with mental health


wrongly?

i thought they will all commit suicide if they don't transition?
isn't suicide a mental health concern?

accompanying article is just as nonsensical.
Ahh... Prick News
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London will March for Trans Rights on July 4th


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LONDON will march for trans equality and to oppose the suggested rollback of trans rights, which include not being able to update the gender marker on their birth certificate and being banned from public bathrooms of the gender they identify with.
Not A Phase, a recently formed trans-owned charity from Cocktails & Confessions host Dani St. James and artist Jacqui Devon, will meet at Marble Arch on July 4th at 12pm, with further updates on their Instagram.
From there they’ll join the other protestors at Hyde Park Corner.
‘Not A Phase’ T-shirts designed by Devon which support Mermaids foundation – and are being worn on the day of the march – can be bought here.
Boris Johnson’s plans are far more than ill-timed with trans people already at greater threat due to the global pandemic and the Trump administration ruling that it is now legal to discriminate against gender identity in healthcare. Along with the Black Lives Matter movement putting a spotlight on the number of trans women who are murdered or victims of police brutality.
According to The Sunday Times, a 2018 public consultation on the Gender Recognition Act – the results of which haven’t been published – informs that 70% of 100,000 participants agreed that trans people don’t need to get a medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria before they can update the gender marker on their birth certificate.
Boris Johnson believed these results were “skewed” because trans people also took part in the survey.

Dani responds to JK Rowling

The movement comes after the damaging comments from author JK Rowling stating that ‘trans women aren’t real women’, which St. James discussed on the newest episode of C&C.
“It’s just really hard because JK Rowling was a huge part of my adolescence and so many people our age. Harry Potter was technically in the same year as me at school,” she joked.
“The whole message behind her body of work was that no matter what you come up against and love will always win. And that’s a great message to give to young people is that good always wins, love always wins, and it was kind of adopted by our community because its the message we like to give out: love always wins.
“And then she’s just come out in 2020 in the middle of a pandemic and the biggest racial uprising since the civil rights movement and looked out her window and said, ‘love always wins… unless your trans and then I hate you”.
“She turned out to be Voldemort in all of this”, Gilét quipped, adding that Rowling was hypocritical to speak about being afraid for her safety in same-sex spaces when that’s the exact fear she seeks to inflict on trans women.


 
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